Australian Hyundai fans can look forward to CarPlay support as Hyundai Australia has now rolled out an infotainment upgrade for a handful of models, adding Apple CarPlay connectivity to variants in the i30, Tucson and Santa Fe lines, according to a report by Mike Stevens of Car Advice.

Stevens reports that while international models of the Tucson have had CarPlay since mid-2015, the Australian market had missed out until now.

Apple today released a list of over one hundred cars (105 at the time of writing) and breaks them down by make and model.

It’s assumed that Apple will keep this list up to date. But in the meantime, here’s the cars that support CarPlay as of Jan 11, 2016:

Audi

2017 Q7

2017 A4

Buick

2016 LaCrosse

2016 Regal

Cadillac

2016 ATS

2016 ATS Coupe

2016 ATS-V

2016 ELR

2016 CTS

2016 CTS-V

2016 XTS

2016 Escalade

2016 Escalade ESV

2016 CT6

Chevrolet

2016 Spark

2016 Cruze

2016 Malibu

2016 Camaro

2016 Camaro Convertible

2016 Silverado

2016 Silverado HD

2016 Impala

2016 Volt

2016 Corvette

2016 Corvette Convertible

2016 Colorado

2016 Tahoe

2016 Suburban

Citroën

2016 C3

2016 C4

2016 C5

2016 Berlingo Multispace

DS

2016 DS 3

2016 DS 3 Cabrio

2016 DS 4

2016 DS 5

Ferrari

2016 California T

2016 488 Spider

2016 488 GTB

2016 F12 Berlinetta

2016 F12 tdf

2016 FF

Ford

2017 Ford Escape

GMC

2016 Canyon

2016 Yukon

2016 Yukon XL

2016 Sierra

Honda

2016 Accord

2016 Civic

2017 NSX

Hyundai

2016 Sonata

2017 Elantra

Mercedes

2016 A-Class

2016 B-Class

2016 GLE-Class

2016 CLA-Class

2016 CLS-Class

2016 E-Class Coupe

2016 E-Class Cabriolet

2016 GLA-Class

Mitsubishi

2016 Pajero

2017 Mirage

Opel

2016 Adam

2016 KARL

2016 Corsa

2016 Astra

2016 Insignia

Porsche

2016 911

2017 Macan

Peugeot

2016 208

2016 Partner Teepe

Seat

2016 Ibiza

2016 Leon

2016 Toledo

2016 Alhambra

Škoda

2016 Superb

2016 Fabia

2016 Rapid

2016 Octavia

2016 Yeti

Suzuki

2016 Baleno

2016 Vitara

2016 SX4 S-CROSS

2016 Ciaz

Volkswagen

2016 Jetta

2016 Passat

2016 CC

2016 Beetle

2016 Beetle Cabrio

2016 Golf

2016 GTI

2016 Golf R

2016 e-Golf

2016 Tiguan

2016 Golf SportWagen

2016 Fox

2016 Polo

2016 Scirocco

2016 Sharan

2016 Spacefox

2016 Touran

2016 Lamando

Volvo

2016 XC90

2017 S90

In other CarPlay news today, Apple released information about the forthcoming iOS 9.3 update which adds new CarPlay functionality for finding places when driving using Apple Maps:

…the Nearby feature in Maps lets you find gas, parking, restaurants, coffee, and more with a tap. So you’ll know the best places to stop, whether you’re on your daily commute or an epic road trip.

Lastly, Apple Music comes to CarPlay in iOS 9.3, scheduled for release later this month.

With iOS 9.3, CarPlay adds even more useful features. New and For You from Apple Music — with songs, artists, and albums handpicked by experts, plus selections based on your preferences— are right at hand on your screen.

A piece from 2015 in the New Yorker discusses Jony Ive and his love of cars:

These days, Ive flies around the world in a Gulfstream GV that Jobs once owned. He drives an Aston Martin and a Bentley. For someone whose job involves promoting a form of commodity fetishism, that’s hardly surprising.

This goes on to note that Apple would, and should only release a car if it can charge higher than commodity prices. The quality needs to be there:

Apple’s vast profits—$39.5 billion in 2014—partially disguise the fact that it operates in a manufacturing industry whose products are rapidly commoditized, and in which only market leaders make much of a return on their investments. Apple can charge higher prices than its competitors because it has a reputation, which Ive helped to create, for superior quality and superior design. If that reputation were to be tarnished, Apple’s profit margins would quickly fall.